*If the AI Singularity is going to happen soon, or at least when a
significant number of people think it's gonna happen soon, then interest
rates are likely going to go way up because a dollar today would be much
more valuable than a dollar would be in a few years. If you knew you’d be a
billionaire in five years (or be dead because AI will kill you) then you
wouldn’t care about saving $100 today. You’d probably try to borrow money
now to live it up, or invest in the transition. And when everyone wants to
borrow and nobody wants to save, the price of money, a.k.a. the interest
rate, goes up, way way up. This phenomenon will be slightly tempered if a
minority of foolish people believe the best course of action is to save
their money now to help them get through the Singularity. I say "foolish"
because if the Singularity goes sideways their bank balance is not going to
help them. *

*If the market actually believed the Singularity is 3 to 5 years away then
today we should be seeing long-term bond yields (10-year or 30-year
Treasury bills) surging. But we're not seeing that because the market has
not yet factored in the Singularity, most people, even many professional
economists, probably wouldn't even know what the word is referring to, but
because of the Moltbook developments I don't think it will be long before
they do.*

*It's more difficult to predict how advances in AI will affect inflation in
the very near future because there are powerful economic forces pushing in
opposite directions. *

*Inflationary Forces:*

*About $1.5 trillion was spent on AI in 2025 if you factor in AI
infrastructure, and all that spending drives up prices, especially for
semiconductors. **DRAM memory chips have increased in price by about 300%
in just the last few months, and NAND flash memory chips are 280% as
expensive. *

*In parts of Virginia and Texas that are near AI data centers electricity
prices have nearly quadrupled in just a matter of months. And this
inflation of electric prices will accelerate in the next couple of years at
least in the US, not so much in China because it already has access to far
more electricity than the US. *

*The price of copper has increased 30% just since August due to increasing
demand from AI data centers. *

*Because of AI the stock market is way up, so people feel richer and thus
are more likely to spend and further fuel inflation. *

*Deflationary Forces:*

*In industries like customer service and legal research the cost per task
has dropped substantially. *

*And because of the huge improvement in AI, the cost of developing new
software has dropped, and the quality of services like medical diagnosis is
going way up while the price stays flat or decreases. *

*Eventually the price of producing everything, not just software, will drop
dramatically but that eventuality is a far more distant prospect, three or
four years away. In the meantime the cost of producing hardware should
drop, although not dramatically, because companies won't have to pay middle
managers, so that would be deflationary; but on the other hand if somebody
thinks an AI agent will replace their middle-management job by 2028, they
may think it would be wise to stop spending and start hoarding cash, then
both inflation and interest rates would tend to fall. So things get
complicated and nobody can predict the future of inflation, certainly I
can't, because I don't know what the result of this tug-of-war will be in
one year.*

*John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*
5d8

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